Children of Ellis Island
By Barry Moreno
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Children of Ellis Island - Barry Moreno
Kremer.
INTRODUCTION
The sweetest things that grow are children and flowers.
So said Ellis Island’s head matron Regina Stucklen back in 1904. With the aid of her 11 assistants, she was charged with the care of 200 or so young immigrants who were detained at Ellis Island in the week that her story appeared in the Washington Post. She described the great variety of foreign youths with amusement and affection, and introduced the reporter to the choicest of the lot. But she made it perfectly clear that what he was seeing that morning was not in the least bit exceptional: it happened every day. In fact, in every week of the year, the matrons cared for unfortunate children, teenaged girls, and women facing the real possibility of either exclusion or deportation. It was quite a job to handle. But other workers at Ellis Island faced similar tasks, whether inspectors, interpreters, clerks, messengers, or missionaries. Fortunately, Augustus Sherman, the chief clerk of the station, took many pictures, a number of which are included in this book.
From the first day Ellis Island opened, in January 1892, until it closed 62 years later, in November 1954, thousands upon thousands of young people found themselves inmates in America’s top federal immigrant control station. There, they waited at the side of parents, guardians, and friends. Some waited alone. For immigrants in the detention rooms, it was especially miserable. For there, they listened with some trepidation when a messenger stepped into the room to call out the names of those to appear before a board of special inquiry or to meet a relative waiting for them in the Discharging Division in the West Wing. Curiously, it is sometimes forgotten that children comprised a major share of the station’s fluid population. Yet, like the adults, they too flowed in and out of the island. Some of these young people had traveled with their families; others had come alone, sometimes to join parents or relatives, sometimes to work. Many teenaged boys were part of a throng of migrant laborers; others came as orphans and some as stowaways. But all were excited by the adventure of the sea voyage to America, and when they arrived, the stunning vision of the New World that was presented by the imposing buildings of Manhattan.
At Ellis Island, children were defined by their age and treated differently based upon their gender. For many years, any youngster below the age of 16 was regarded as inadmissible without a parent or guardian. This regulation was only really significant in regard to boys, since girls and women were always required to have a proper male escort to enter the country. But boys 16 and older and all men were generally admissible on their own account. The unfairness of this policy was upheld on grounds that females needed special safeguards to protect them from the dangers of immorality and white slavery. These threats were real, and stories of fallen immigrant girls and women,
widely publicized by religious leaders and social workers, alarmed the public.
Why did boys come to America? They came for the very same reason that men did: to seek employment and to earn higher wages than they could in their homeland. The emigration of teenaged boys was an enormous reality. Italians and Greeks were often brought to America by bosses called padrones. These men brought the boys over as cheap laborers and found jobs for them in factories, mills, and outdoor labor projects such as were available at construction sites. On the other hand, northern Europeans often came to work as farm laborers. Another reason some emigrated was simply to earn enough money so that their sisters would have a dowry with which to marry. Young Greeks were especially affected by this social duty. Meanwhile, other teenagers came to escape military service, especially during time of war. Thus, the Russo-Japanese War, the Balkan Wars, and both world wars were responsible for quite a number of youthful exoduses. But wartime was not the only time young men avoided the draft. They also left simply to avoid the onerous requirements of military service imposed on soldiers in Europe. This was especially true of the nations in Eastern Europe and the Ottoman Empire.
Girls came to America for rather different reasons. Aside from simply joining relatives, girls often came to get married. Girls married in their teens in those days, and many were already betrothed and came simply to join their fiancés. Others came as picture brides,
young women and teenaged girls who had been sent steamship tickets by strangers in an arranged marriage. Some teenage boys and girls came to the United States for educational or vocational purposes. Entering as students, they were bound for schools, colleges, seminaries, or convents.
Another set of young immigrants were those with personal or family problems. Of this number, some had experienced misfortunes and many were orphans. The arrangement to bring over orphans was usually made by charity workers, missionaries, and immigrant aid societies. Thousands passed through the station, having been admitted under bond—bonds were usually obtained by sponsors such as the charitable groups mentioned. After leaving Ellis Island, many were put on orphan trains that took them to farms and small towns throughout the country. One such orphan was Harry Gerguson, who later masqueraded as Prince Michael Romanoff
and ended up as a successful restaurateur in Hollywood.
Another group of youngsters traveling on their own were adventurers or those who